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In this PR, we consolidate TypeScript config files (using the 'include' setting) and JS test directory naming. The goal is to reduce the number of processed files during different build steps. |
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tsconfig.json |
README.md
@woocommerce/expression-evaluation
Evaluation of JavaScript-like expressions in an optional context.
Examples of simple expressions:
1 + 2
foo === 'bar'
foo ? 'bar' : 'baz'
Examples of complex expressions:
foo.bar.baz === 'qux'
foo.bar
&& ( foo.bar.baz === 'qux' || foo.baz === 'quux' )
foo.bar
&& ( foo.baz === "qux" || foo.baz === "quux" )
&& ( foo.quux > 1 && foo.quux <= 5 )
foo.bar
&& ( foo.baz === "qux" || foo.baz === "quux" )
&& ( foo.quux > 1 && foo.quux <= 5 )
? "boo"
: "baa"
foo
+ 5
/* This is a comment */
* ( bar ? baz : qux )
API
evaluate
Evaluates an expression in an optional context.
Usage
import { evaluate } from '@woocommerce/expression-evaluation';
const result = evaluate( '1 + foo', { foo: 2 } );
console.log( result ); // 3
Parameters
- expression
string
: The expression to evaluate. - context
Object
: Optional. The context to evaluate the expression in. Variables in the expression will be looked up in this object.
Returns
any
: The result of the expression evaluation.
Expression syntax
Grammar and types
The expression syntax is based on JavaScript. The formal grammar is defined in parser.ts.
An expression consists of a single statement.
Features like if
statements, for
loops, function calls, and variable assignments, are not supported.
The following types are supported:
null
- Boolean:
true
andfalse
- Number: An integer or floating point number.
- String: A sequence of characters that represent text.
Literals
Values in an expression can be written as literals.
null
null
Boolean
true
false
Number
1
5.23
-9
String
String literals can be written with single or double quotes. This can be helpful if the string contains a single or double quote.
'foo'
"foo"
'foo "bar"'
"foo 'bar'"
Quotes can be escaped with a backslash.
'foo \'bar\''
"foo \"bar\""
Context variables
Variables can be used in an expression. The value of a variable is looked up in the context.
const result = evaluate( 'foo', { foo: 1 } );
console.log( result ); // 1
Nested properties can be accessed with the dot operator.
const result = evaluate( 'foo.bar', { foo: { bar: 1 } } );
console.log( result ); // 1
Operators
The following operators are supported.
Comparison operators
Equal (==
)
Returns true
if the operands are equal.
1 == 1
Not equal (!=
)
Returns true
if the operands are not equal.
1 != 2
Strict equal (===
)
Returns true
if the operands are equal and of the same type.
1 === 1
Strict not equal (!==
)
Returns true
if the operands are not equal and/or not of the same type.
1 !== "1"
Greater than (>
)
Returns true
if the left operand is greater than the right operand.
2 > 1
Greater than or equal (>=
)
Returns true
if the left operand is greater than or equal to the right operand.
2 >= 2
Less than (<
)
Returns true
if the left operand is less than the right operand.
1 < 2
Less than or equal (<=
)
Returns true
if the left operand is less than or equal to the right operand.
2 <= 2
Arithmetic operators
Addition (+
)
Returns the sum of two operands.
1 + 2
Subtraction (-
)
Returns the difference of two operands.
2 - 1
Multiplication (*
)
Returns the product of two operands.
2 * 3
Division (/
)
Returns the quotient of two operands.
6 / 2
Modulus (%
)
Returns the remainder of two operands.
5 % 2
Negation (-
)
Returns the negation of an operand.
-1
Logical operators
Logical AND (&&
)
Returns true
if both operands are true
.
true && true
Logical OR (||
)
Returns true
if either operand is true
.
true || false
Logical NOT (!
)
Returns true
if the operand is false
.
!false
Conditional (ternary) operator
Returns the first value if the condition is true
, otherwise it returns the second value.
true ? 1 : 2
Comments
Comments can be used to document an expression. Comments are treated as whitespace and are ignored by the parser.
/* This is a comment */